12
. Homecomin g Edition ----------------- - E UV .- YSS E _he . ' VANCOUVER, B .C ., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 196 0 he_ Honours Col . Loga n ormer Classics Hea d 1960' Great Trekke r By SUSANNE CLARK E Colonel Harry T . Logan, Professor Emeritus and forme r Head .of the Department of Classics at UBC ,has been awarde d the 1960 Great Trekker Award . Col Logan will be officially presented with the Great Trek- presented the Cairn Trophy and ker Award by the students, " a replica by AMS President Col . Logan said, "and it give s Dave Edgar at the Homecomin g Pep Rally noon today in th e War Memorial Gymnasium .. At the unofficial ceremon y Wednesday, Colonel Logan said, me great pleasure to receive it . " Said Alumni Association Di - rector Art Sager of Col . Logan , `He's the youngest old man I . know . No one has devoted him - p No . Me .'kan Students . Freedom Restricte d A letter has been received at UBC written by a group of Mexico City--students charging than-Mexican students are being severely persecuted for expressing anti-government views . The group, under the nam e "The Provisory Committee fo r the Defence of Human Rights" , claimed that students have bee n arrested, beaten or assassinate d in the streets, as the govern- ment puts restrictions on demo- cratic ways of expression . They requested that Canadian s present a petition for liberatio n of Mexicans now in jail for poli- tical crimes . IMPRISONE D Student officials said the letter , addressed to the Rector of UBC , was received by Dean Geoffre y Andrew on Oct . 4 . It was writ - ten in French on brown paper . The Dean turned it over to In- ternational House for translation . The Mexican group is not a recognized student organization . AMS plans to investigate th e origin of the letter . This is the letter : The Rector , A group of students from th e Faculty of Philosophy and Let- ters of the University of Mexico , preoccupied by the grave event s COL HARRY T . LOGAN, former head of the UBC Classics Dept . being presented with the Grea t Trekker Award by AMS president Dave Edgar and Homecoming Chairman Alan Cornwal l as a press conference Wednesday . "I am delighted tb know there's self so much to service both t o no condition that I must do the his community and the univer - Great Trek again . " sity . " He recalled the original Great ACTIVE LIF E Trek in which he participated Colonel Logan was born i n when students and faculty mem- Nova Scotia, received his publi c hers, carrying stones marched "over a log trail" from Sasama t street, to the present Chemistr y P1,o :o by A . Tanner Building and deposited the pil e ; of stones there . RESULTS OF He remembered that the thei r president of AMS referred t o the pile of stones and said tha t BLOOD DRIVE it would be the first complet e unit built an the campus . "It was," Col . Logan eludes . ANNUAL AWARD The Great Trekker Award, in- stituted schooling in British Columbia , and obtained a B .A . from Mc- Gill . As a Rhodes Scholar, he later earned his B .A. and M .A . degrees from Oxford . He has been an active membe r of the UBC Alumni Associatio n since its founding, and becam e editor of the Alumni Chronicl e in 1953 . He also edited "Thu m Est",_ a history of UBC . In 1915, as academic repre- sentative, he helped draft th e constitution of The Alma Mater in 1960, its presented Society along with Sherwoo d annually by the Alma Mater So- Lett and others, giving the AM S ciety to an alumnus of the uni- complete self government . versity who has achieved emin- ence in his chosen field, made a worthy contribution to his com- munity, and has evidenced' kee n and continued interest in UBC . "It's a terrific honour to be Must Renew Visa s Foreign 'Student s Foreign students must hav e their temporary landing permit s renewed Friday . Immigration department of- ficials will be at the registrar' s office between 9 :30 a .m . an d 4 :30 p .m . Students must bring passport s and other relevant document s in order to have the visas re - newed; i1 CCL lately taking place in ou r country, address themselves t o you with the greatest respect t o acknowledge you of the follow- ing facts . During the course of the tw o past years of the government of the actual president, the nationa l policy has been characterized b y a growing restriction of th e democratic ways of expression . one has arrived in the past few weeks to repressive methods tha t are reminding of the dictatoria l of General Porfirio The UBC blood drive ende d 180 pints short of its 2,300 quota . terion : Colin Cameron . co-chairma n of this year's drive stated tha t the committee was pleased wit h 87% of the quota reached . Of the 1,996 persons attending, 21 2 were found unfit to give blood . Forestry won the inter-facult y competition with 245% of it s quota . The nurses placed secon d with 180% . The Aggies thir d with 165% . At the bottom wer e Commerce and Medicine . Serum donors turned out th e following week to bring th e total over the top . practice s Diaz. One of the branches most af- fected has been the students . During August, several hundre d of them have been arrested , savagely beaten and even assas- sinated in the streets while mani- festing their discontent . The persecution of the free- dom of thought has now becom e the official attitude . The grea t painter David Alforo Siqueriros , the 74-year-old writer Filomen o Mato, and several leaders of poli- tical and social organizations ar e are still in prison for having ex - pressed their ideas freely . We have the honour to addres s this request to you in order that 1 yqu may be able, in a most ap- , propriate way, to transmit our - I anguish to the free men of your country, in order that they ma y present a petition of amnesty fo r all those that are still in jail fo r political crime, in accordanc e with the Declaration of Huma n Rights, to -which all countries o f the world 5re subscribed . eon- Classes Cancelled There will be no lecture s or Labs this afternoon . Clas- SERVED OVERSEA S Col. Logan left UBC as a Classics Instructor to serve ovelseas as commander of a machine-gun battalion durin g World War I . He returned after the war an d rose to the head of the Classic s department . Last year' s recipient of th e award was James Sinclair, pro - ses have been cancelled be- vincial Minister of Fisheries and Cause of Fall Congregation .' an ex-editor of The Ubyssey. THE MILLS BROTHERS will headline the Homecoming Pep Rally at 12 :30 to-day in the Memor- ial Gym . Admission will be 25c with all proce eds going to Red Feather . See story page 5 . LY IN GYM AT NOON

Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

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Page 1: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

.

HomecomingEdition

----------------- -

E UV.- YSSE_he .

' VANCOUVER, B .C ., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_

Honours Col . Loganormer Classics Head1960' Great Trekker

By SUSANNE CLARKE

Colonel Harry T . Logan, Professor Emeritus and formerHead .of the Department of Classics at UBC ,has been awarde dthe 1960 Great Trekker Award .

Col Logan will be officially presented with the Great Trek-presented the Cairn Trophy and ker Award by the students, "a replica by AMS President Col . Logan said, "and it givesDave Edgar at the HomecomingPep Rally noon today in th eWar Memorial Gymnasium..

At the unofficial ceremon yWednesday, Colonel Logan said,

me great pleasure to receive it . "Said Alumni Association Di-

rector Art Sager of Col . Logan ,`He's the youngest old man I

. know. No one has devoted him -

p

No .

Me .'kan Students .Freedom Restricted

A letter has been received at UBC written by a group ofMexico City--students charging than-Mexican students are being

severely persecuted for expressing anti-government views .The group, under the name

"The Provisory Committee fo rthe Defence of Human Rights" ,claimed that students have beenarrested, beaten or assassinate din the streets, as the govern-ment puts restrictions on demo-cratic ways of expression .

They requested that Canadian spresent a petition for liberationof Mexicans now in jail for poli-tical crimes .IMPRISONE DStudent officials said the letter ,addressed to the Rector of UBC ,was received by Dean GeoffreyAndrew on Oct . 4 . It was writ-ten in French on brown paper .The Dean turned it over to In-ternational House for translation .

The Mexican group is not arecognized student organization .AMS plans to investigate theorigin of the letter .

This is the letter :The Rector ,A group of students from the

Faculty of Philosophy and Let-ters of the University of Mexico ,preoccupied by the grave event s

COL HARRY T. LOGAN, former head of the UBC Classics Dept . being presented with the Grea tTrekker Award by AMS president Dave Edgar and Homecoming Chairman Alan Cornwal las a press conference Wednesday .

"I am delighted tb know there's self so much to service both t ono condition that I must do the his community and the univer -Great Trek again . "

sity ."He recalled the original Great ACTIVE LIF E

Trek in which he participated Colonel Logan was born i nwhen students and faculty mem- Nova Scotia, received his publi chers, carrying stones marched"over a log trail" from Sasamatstreet, to the present Chemistr y

P1,o :o by A . Tanner

Building and deposited the pil e; of stones there .

RESULTS OFHe remembered that the thei r

president of AMS referred t othe pile of stones and said that

BLOOD DRIVE it would be the first completeunit built an the campus.

"It was," Col . Loganeludes.ANNUAL AWARD

The Great Trekker Award, in-stituted

schooling in British Columbia ,and obtained a B .A. from Mc-Gill . As a Rhodes Scholar, helater earned his B .A. and M.A.degrees from Oxford .

He has been an active memberof the UBC Alumni Associatio nsince its founding, and becameeditor of the Alumni Chroniclein 1953 . He also edited "ThumEst",_ a history of UBC .

In 1915, as academic repre-sentative, he helped draft theconstitution of The Alma Mater

in 1960, its presented Society along with Sherwoo dannually by the Alma Mater So- Lett and others, giving the AMSciety to an alumnus of the uni- complete self government .

versity who has achieved emin-ence in his chosen field, made aworthy contribution to his com-munity, and has evidenced' keenand continued interest in UBC .

"It's a terrific honour to be

Must Renew Visa sForeign 'Students

Foreign students must havetheir temporary landing permit srenewed Friday .

Immigration department of-ficials will be at the registrar' soffice between 9:30 a.m. and4:30 p .m .

Students must bring passportsand other relevant document sin order to have the visas re-newed;

i1 CCL

lately taking place in ourcountry, address themselves t oyou with the greatest respect t oacknowledge you of the follow-ing facts .

During the course of the tw opast years of the government ofthe actual president, the nationa lpolicy has been characterized bya growing restriction of th edemocratic ways of expression.one has arrived in the past fewweeks to repressive methods thatare reminding of the dictatoria l

of General Porfirio

The UBC blood drive ended180 pints short of its 2,300 quota .terion :

Colin Cameron . co-chairmanof this year's drive stated tha tthe committee was pleased wit h87% of the quota reached. Ofthe 1,996 persons attending, 21 2were found unfit to give blood .

Forestry won the inter-facultycompetition with 245% of itsquota . The nurses placed secondwith 180% . The Aggies thirdwith 165% . At the bottom wer eCommerce and Medicine .

Serum donors turned out thefollowing week to bring th etotal over the top .

practice sDiaz.

One of the branches most af-fected has been the students .During August, several hundre dof them have been arrested ,savagely beaten and even assas-sinated in the streets while mani-festing their discontent .

The persecution of the free-dom of thought has now becom ethe official attitude . The grea tpainter David Alforo Siqueriros ,the 74-year-old writer Filomen oMato, and several leaders of poli-tical and social organizations ar eare still in prison for having ex -pressed their ideas freely.

We have the honour to addres sthis request to you in order that 1

yqu may be able, in a most ap- ,propriate way, to transmit our - Ianguish to the free men of yourcountry, in order that they ma ypresent a petition of amnesty fo rall those that are still in jail fo rpolitical crime, in accordanc ewith the Declaration of HumanRights, to -which all countries o fthe world 5re subscribed .

eon-

Classes CancelledThere will be no lecture s

or Labs this afternoon. Clas-

SERVED OVERSEA SCol. Logan left UBC as a

Classics Instructor to serveovelseas as commander of amachine-gun battalion durin gWorld War I .

He returned after the war androse to the head of the Classicsdepartment .

Last year's recipient of theaward was James Sinclair, pro-

ses have been cancelled be- vincial Minister of Fisheries andCause of Fall Congregation .' an ex-editor of The Ubyssey.

THE MILLS BROTHERS will headline the Homecoming Pep Rally at 12 :30 to-day in the Memor-ial Gym. Admission will be 25c with all proce eds going to Red Feather . See story page 5 .

LY IN GYM AT NOON

Page 2: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

`Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 27, 196 0

TIlE 115 YSSZYSTIMULUS

O.K.

QR,, L s

EKGOTTAWA SEWS `iq"t. Et4CQi1 IG-'t* KO S TO ?WOK.

Letters To The Editor

Authorized as second class mail by Pbst Office Department, Ottaw aMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

Published three times weekly throughout the University yearIn Vancouver by the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society ,University of B.C . Editorial opinions expressed are those of theEditorial Board of the Ubysey and not necessarily those of the AlmaMater Society or the University of B.C .

TELEPHONES: CA 4-3242, locals 12 (news desk), 13 (critics-sports), 14 (Editor-inChief), 15, 6 (business offices) .

Editor-in-Chief : Fred Fletche rManaging Editor Roger McAfeeFeatures Editor Ed LavallePhotography Editor Ray GriggSenior Editor Ann PickardSports Editor Mike HunterActing News Editor Denis StanleyCritics Editor .

. . Dave BroxnigeLayout Editor : Clarence Buh r

NEWS STAFF : Susanne Clarke, Joe Bolduc, Derek Allen ,Wendy Barr, Bob Hendrickson, Bill Piket, Ia nBrown, Jerry Pirie, Margaret Obana, Colema nRomalis, Kitty Watt, Fred Jones .HOMECOMING EDITION : MIRIAM ROBERTS an d

FRANK FINDENIGG . Others: Fred Jones ,Dave Dawson, plus student writers and alumn iRon Robinson .

SPORTS—Bert MacKinnon, Herb Walker, Chris Fahrni

Invective OutIt is indeed a shame when our precious right to free-

dom of expression is denied, but it is an even greater sham e

and a crime when that freedom is abused .

It is on the latter charge, Mr . Clive Ansley, author o f

"Searchlight", that you are indicted.

It was with some horror, and with an even greater

revulsion, that I read your column in The Ubyssey o f

October 25 .

To imagine that a supposedly intelligent, broadminded

student of this university, (especially one whose inquirin g

mind has penetrated many of the issues on this universit y

more than has the average student) would stoop so low a s

to slander and insult an employee of the university is be-

yond my comprehension.The Brock dietician, whom you childlishly termed

"Miss Grundy," was merely doing her duty, that is, com-

plying with administration regulations which disallow com-

mercial advertising in most university buildings .

)3ut, . as you say, "the principle involved . . .is more

important."I agree with you, Mr . Ansley, the principle of a matter

is always more important, but what of your principles ?

Even were it - true that the dietician refused to allow

the "`Sunny Trails" match folders to be placed in the vend-

ing machine on the grounds of "conservatism" and "depres-

sing conformity," there would still be no need for you to

subject the object of your displeasure to the invective and

insulting inferences (examples : "hypocrisy," "ignorance " ,

"deceit" , and "prejudice") that you used to freely in you r

column.

The defender of principles and rights need never employ

innuendo. and direct insults as his chosen weapon .

Mr. Ansley, you must learn, and I truly hope you will

learn, that both the -rights of freedom of expression and

the privilege of being a member of the student community

require certain obligations .

Not until you learn, these obligations and practise them

will you achieve that maturity e}t #Iag you to the right s

and ,privileges we are so fortunate . to have in a democratic

oountry .I mu* apologize =for you, Mr. Ansley, not for your

;right to criticize, but ,fcir , .the discourteous and undignified

way in y¢•hieh ,you attempted to accomplish it .

-44 Lavalle.

.Slick. That's what it was .

Not mob violence . Not destruction. Not impulsive or

~,stupid .But slick. Clever. Like a good confidence man or an

artsman would do' it .

They slipped up on the two of them and spirited them

off to the .Engineering Building . They had tough luck.

They missed one . ;His class had been moved .

But they had two. They could show that they were

the strongest faculty on campus.

They had an attraction for their general meeting to

supplement their Homecoming Queen candidate.

They went over to scare the 'rock-types . And they

came out on top, even though the Brock-types used fire

hose .'Hail ,engineers.

By GARRY NIXO NI should have realized tha t

Mr. Peter Morris of Cinema 1 6would not take my , remarks onhis last movie lying down .

The following is from hisreply: "'You are under a sa ddelusion if you consider tha tyou can cover up a pitiful lackof critical faculties in you r"review" of "Le 'Sang d'unPoete" by your turgid twittin gof Cinema 16 and its policy. Asan adult film society we aim a tpresenting cinematic art in allits aspects .

I assure you that we make n oclaims that "every well-knownforeign film is a work of art" .One would only have to seeThe 41st or 12 Night to bepurged of this illusion . We onlyclaim the films we present areexamples of film art in its manyforms .

This point, however palesinto insignificance when it iscompared with the lack o faesthetic judgement, sensibil-ity, and critical ability whichyou so patently demonstrate din your review of Blood of aPoet . It is obvious that youhave a prejudice against filmsof this type, and, since you re-fuse to lower the barriers ofyour mind you missed thewhole point, one should t - keinto consideration that youwalked into the film when itwas half finished (I only wishedthis was true . G.N .) you wouldprobably find even Pollyanaincomprehensible under thesecircumstances . Because Coctea udid not give you his thoughtsand ideas in words of one syll-able, and did not follow theaccepted film form but choseto experiment with his medium ,you dismiss his work as "in-coherent" and "lack continu-ity"- . Because he did not use aliteral, naturalistic ;overworkedplot and cliched convention syou sneer at his film , as "lack-ing meaning" .

In Blood of a Poet Cocteaudefines the poet as a hierophantwhose function is to initiate thepublic to mysteries . His metho dof presentation is like that ofthe surrealists who, contentwith expressing the languageand image of dreams and offree association do not seek tointerpret the dreams or theimages of their work .

Any poem, mystery orfantasy (as is Blood of a Poet )may appear at first too inac-cessible, too personal or priv-ate in its symbols . You de-nounced the film as being in-comprehensible to anyone bu tCocteau (I never said it wascomprehensible to Cocteau !G.N.) You apparently forget(or do not know) that surreal-ism has taught that what isoften called a personal symbo lis really universal .

"It is no use simply sayin g`surrealism is bosh' it is an artmovement which has had tre-mendous influence on our gen-eration, and, as such, any criticworthy of the name shouldmake an effort to understandand appreciate its means of ex-pression. To dismiss the film as`incomprehensible' and `lackingmeaning' is to demonstrateyour woeful lack of understand-ing of poetry, the poet's min dand one of the most influentia lart movements of the presen tcentury. May I respectfullysuggest you limit yourself t o`criticizing' Pollyana, on whic hflim the blankness of you rmind 'will prove no handicap ."

There not being space, Ishall reply next week. G.N.)

'Red Hairy Mass 'Editor ,The Ubyssey,Dear Sir ,

Please enclose this declara-tion in the Thursday edition o fyour paper .

-WHEREAS it is common

knowledge that the Engineersare the lowest form of life o nthis campus, and

WHEREAS their compe-tence, capabilities and capacityare at their lowest ebb, an dWHEREAS the ignorant Redhairy mass have, in the past ,relied on brawn rather tha nbrains, and quantity ratherthan quality, in which they aresorely lacking, andWHEREAS apathy and' inertiareign supreme in the offices o fthe EUS,WE, the illustrious member sof the Law Undergraduate So-ciety, the elite intelligentsia ofthis campus, do hereby declareourselves to be the spirited ,energetic, imaginative, and infact, the ONLY LEADERS ofthe student body .

The Law UndergraduateSociety .

Booster PositionEditor,The Ubyssey ,Dear Sir,

I wish to clarify the positionof the Booster Club with re-gards to Tuesday's "Letters t othe Editor" in The Ubyssey .The Booster Club's main ob-jective is to promote studentspirit towards various athleti cevents on campus . This prob-lem, although not completelythe result of the students them-selves, is the one which ourorganization faces .

The Engineering and Agricul-ture Undergraduate Societieshave just cause for taking thei rstand in Tuesday's edition .They were correct in sayingthat Friday's Pep Meet waspoorly planned and improperlystaged by impulsive membersof the Booster Club without

any executive authority to doso .

The point in fact is this . Ourorganization, although activeon campus for several years, isin a state of complete reorgan-ization . Anyone previously con-nected with the Booster Clubknows the magnitude of ourjob. One only has to attend afootball game to realize howpeople utterly become dis-couraged and attempt to breakdown the present apatheticsituation by radical means .These were the people wh ocaused last Friday's disturb-ance .

However, their intention swere meant in the best in- .terests of the student body asa whole, and, despite what hap-pened ,they accomplished some-thing. They emphasized thatsomewhere on this campus ,there IS spirit . We as BirdBoosters are proud to be th enucleus of that spirit . We arelearning a valuable lesson ,that it does pay to organiz ethings properly . For Friday, w eare sorry .

The students of UBC will b ehearing a great deal from theBooster Club in the future . Wewant people to know that weexist ,and that our problem istheir problem. We want themto know that it is very worth-while to be a part .of the spiritwhich we represent .

Sincerly,

-Ev Phillips ,President,Thunderbird Booster Club

Law I .

What, No Beatniks ?Editor ,The Ubyssey,Dear Sir : ,

I note in the Ubyssey of Oct .18 that "Jazzsoc has no beat-niks and wants none . "

Are any steps being takento ban this discriminatory or-ganization from campus ?

Cooly yours,Ian Brown .

Page 3: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Thursday, October 27, 1960

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

FIVE-TIIIIITY CLU BBy IAN BROWN.

ExecutivesShould Ru nFor Office

Corporations and businesse smust encourage their senior ex-ecutives to run for public of-fices, John Haar told Libera lClub members Wednesday atnoon.

He spoke on "The Relatio nof Business to Politics", contend-ing that, "Corporations, and th epeople that make them up, hav eevery right to support thei ropinions. To put them in per-spective is the job of the rest ofthe country, and especially thepolitical parties . "

Haar stated that the glorifi-cation of industry in our soci-ply has bred lack of respect forpolitical institutions. Businessexecutives would rather remainn private industry then lendtheir talents, to public admini-ttration, he said .

The stratification of politicalsffices has contributed to this ,he said. The most distinguishe doffice is the federal parliament,;ust below that comes the pro-vincial legislature .

At the bottom is some suckerrunning for the school board ,he said .

Business needs a well runcountry in which- to function,he stated, and it is to theirewn advantage to see that th etalented people in private en-terprise get out to help run an dpreserve our form of govern-ment.

He cited the case of Bethle-`:em Steel in the United Satesto support his contention. In-stead of maintaining a lobbyBethlehem has urged its exec-utives to try to get into Con-gress as members .

This is a much more directform of influence, he said ."Where you have an electivesystem, you have influences be-ing exerted .

"I have often 'heard it said ,particularly by businessmen,nat politics is a pig sty, that its

a dirty business . The only waythat I know of to clean out apig sty is to get in there and,hovel," he stated .

`We're rolling-and that's for publication? "

Thus an exultant Dave Edgar welcomed a decision on th e

proposed new Union Building that commits Council "right u p

to their necks . "

Council Monday night recommended that the student body

support the building on D parking lot of a combined Student

Union -Building, cafeterias and winter sports arena, providin g

that details of finance can be arranged . This decision, in effect ,

means that Council has chosen a definite path of action out o f

the morass of alternatives bogging this project down .

Administration has already indicated it might be prepare d

-to help finance a Union Building, if it were built in conjunctio nwith a winter sports arena . However, no definite commitment

was made, and it looks as though it 's their move . Should theydecide not to participate, Council would probably go ahea d

with plans for the Union Building alone .

So, all the Student Union Building Committee has to deis draw up their plans and find a way to finance the project .Mortgage, anyone ?

In an interim report to Council on Frosh Orientation, FO CChairman Jim Meekison was somewhat less than encouragingabout the orientation program .

"The present program," he said, "has been about as suc-cessful as this type of program can be . The trouble is that it i snot the right type; it is only reaching one or two hundre dof the 2,500 Frosh on campus . "

Meekison admitted that, even after two years on F'OC

he just couldn't tell what the right program would be, andsaid the problem would need extensive study . He suggestedthat Council appoint a committee to investigate and report o rthis matter .

He also pointed out that there was not as much co-opera-tien as there could be between Student and Administratio nefforts. Several Councillors felt that much of the Administra-tion program could be presented in writen form; this wouldgive FOC more time to get to the Frosh in - the first few day s.of term .

*

*

*

Two weeks- ago, a member of Players ' Club came to StudentCouncil pleading for an increase in their budget allowance .He said they seeded about $1,100 to operate, and it had beenwhispered to him that UBC was giving - them a mere $200 —a statement that astounded UCC Councillor Patience Ryan ,whose budget hadn't even been drawn up .

It turned out that this chappie wasn't even on Players 'Club executive, that UCC and the Finance Commietee were --quite prepared to give the club sufficient operating funds, and

that the club's treasurer settled for a grant or $400, sayingthey should make up the balance on English 100 play readings .So everybody's happy—except, presumably, the guy who start-

ed the schemozzle .

*

*

*

The Discipline Committee has decided that Engineer s

should pay for the removal of the bricks they used in thei rrecent Brock extention project. It has not yet been resolvedwho will pay the bill for broken bricks .

*

*

*

The Lost and Found Office, formerly housed in the Colleg eShop, has been relocated in the Book Store (that's at the busstop, in case you happen to be lost) . Sales of unclaimed item swill be held about once a month, at the College Shop .

EDITOR CAGED Ubyssey Editor-in-chief, Fred Fletcher doesn' tseem the least bit worried as he peers through what th eengineers considered a fitting receptacle for anythin gassociated with the pub .

Photo by A. Tanne r

Engineers FoiledIn Kidnapping. .

EUS was partially foiled in a kidnap attempt Wednesday .

Fate intervened and prevented Roger McAfee from being

caught and held with two other prominent students . McAfe e

was to have had,a class at the Frediric Wood Theater ; however,

the class had been moved .

McAfee stated that he hoped ASS/~ANNOUNCESthe Engineers sent to catch him /'1 i

® had not got et writing.

NEW PIXDEADLINE

Ubyssey editor, Fred Fletcher ,and Frosh Orientation Chair-man, Jim Meekison, were kid-napped tboueh. The incident r-u,t be taken before Tuesday ,

by EUS presi- the Undergrad Society warnedas a normal kid- today .

It had been previously an-nounced that the deadline wouldbr November 15 .

Pictures will be taken betwee na et and 5 p•-- at Krass Photo -m

ratihy Studio, *569 Granville S t^>pp, :̂intments cm be made byphoning MU 1-9340 .

Gowns and "Personal Hist^ry •forms are at the studio . Boyspast wear shirts and ties andzirls must wear white bo'use s

Frosh hazing .The Engineers claim that they

held Fletcher for printing theEoostcr Club letter in Tuesday'spaper .

v

*

*

*

Arts and Science Grad photo s

was descri'--eddent Bob Nobl esnapping.

Fletcher was taken complete-ly by surprise u pon leaving a11 :30 lecture by president Nobl eand seven other Engineers . Flet -cher and Meakihen were detain -ed in the Engineering buildin gInd were ta,cen to the yUS gen-eral meeting .

The Fe ain_ce had o'-tainedcopies of the victim's timetable sfrom some unkcwn source .

Apparently the Engineer shave been trying to net Meeki-'li UBC Flags Halfmastson into their clutches for som eMile . The 1 i .µnen i a was a pro- for German Professo r.est over Meehison's banning

Flags on the Main Mall andthe Faculty Club were at half- Khrushchev" ,mast Tuesday in remembrance I Due to popular --- demandof Dr. Marianna Jetter, Dept . j `Works of the Masters.. will re-•of German, who passed away turn to the air 10 :30 to 11:30Monday .

each week day morning .

All The NewsOn Monitor

UBC Radio has introduced aprogram covering campus, na-tional, and world activities eachTuesday morning 11 :30 to 12 :30 .

It is monitor including fifty-five minutes of interviews ,special events, student counci lhighlights and good music .

Future programmes will fea-ture a survey of the Americanpresidential election, an exclu-sive series on "The Rise of

and interviews

Judy Jack reported a very successful University Day, witha turnout of about 1,400 parents . Apparently a few tour leader smanaged to get themselves and their parties lost, but there i s

reason to believe that they have all been recoverd .

KOUNCIL KWICKIES

AMS Budget was given final aproval by Council—con-gratulations Mr. Robinson!

An increase in A-Card sales was reported of almos t$1,000 over last year.

A meeting on Student Government Revision will be hel dFriday noon in Bu. 212 .

Canadian Money For Olympic SiteOnly Canadian capital i s

wanted to develop Garibald iPark if it is chosen as the sit e

of the 1963 Olympic games ,a director of tae Garibald i

Olympic Development Asso-cis tion said he -e Tuesday .

The director, DaveMatthews, spoke to about 25 0students in UBC Auditorium.

Matthews said many Unite dStates firms are interested in

money in the project ,but that it is not wanted. Ex-pected cost of developing th earea is about $10 million .

Most of the money require dwould be supplied from the ,federal and provincial govern-ments . Any private capita lthat is required should comefrom B.C ., Matthews said .

A two-lane highway will de-finitely be built to the area,said Matthews, and Highways

Minister Phil Gaglardi hadindicated a four-lane road willbe built if Garibaldi is chosenfor the games .

He said the read would put -Vancouver only about an hour .away from the Games areapand Seattle would be onlyabout four hours away . -

"Garibaldi will be a greaterresort than either Sun Valle yor .Squaw Valley, if it is de-veloped," stated Matthews . j

Page 4: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Page 4

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 27, 196 0

CUP . CapersBy BOB HENDRICKSO N

• TORONTO (CUP)—A .B: Ga-ehinga, the third African studentto be brought here to U of T bythe African Students Foundationarrived in Toronto Oct 20 .

Over 28,0 African student shave been brought to Canadianand American universities b yway of the Kennedy airlift . Ofthese 19 have come to Canada .

* * *OTTAWA (CUP)—A Canadia n

student representative attend-ing an international student con-ference was charged last weekwith bein g"a running dog o f:American imperialism " and toldthat Canadians were still "lack-eys of the Queen" ., • Walter Tarnopolsky, former

National Federation of CanadianUniversity 'Students president ,attended the Sixth Annual Con-gress of the communist domin-ated International Union of Stu -dents, held in Bagdad on Oct .8-17 .

Tarnopolsky said that Cuba ndelegates from Latin Americ acalled Canadians hypocrites be -cause 'Canada never helped theLatin American countries an dbecause she can not clear up he rown English imperialism .

NFCUS president Bruce Raw -son said the incident "is an un-fortunate confirmation of the in -tolerance and the dogmatic at-titude of an assembly dominate dby a group of mutant Marxists . "

NFCUS is not a member o fthe IUIS but belongs to the 70-nation International StudentConference which Was forme din 1950 .

* * *

SASKATOtON .:.(CUP)—PruneMister' Diefenbaker told TheSheaf that he was in favor of"the widest possible extensio nof university scholarships" .

"Only about 15% of Canadia nUniversity students hold scholar -ships .

This should be compared toother democratic countrieswhere the figure is as high a s

," he said .. "I want to see Canadian s

given the opportunity to ,obtai nthe highest level of education .according to ability, and thatpoverty shall not be a 'bar t othe development of individualcapacities. "

He described himself as "avery strong advocate for the ex-tension of scholarship plans" .

The Prime Minister said thatt h e government establishedabout 1000 exchange scholar•ships not a,valiable before an dwhich were given to the 'Com-monwealth exchange plan.

Diefenbaker did not say whatthe next federal move would b eregarding university schplar-ships.

He denied that he, or his par-ty, had promised 10,000 $600Scholarships in 1957 .

He did not comment onNFCUS president Bruce Raw-son's promise to inquire aboutthe fate of campaign promisesregarding student assistance,scholarships and taxation relief .

Lag Bum You!There once was a writer who

dribbled on forever. His editorcommanded him to write n omore than three pages in hisnext chapter. The writer gotthrough one and two pages al lright, but then creative geniusconquered him again, and hefilled fourteen more sheets. Hesolves his problem by taping allfourteen pages together an dlabelling them "Page three." Theeditor wen out and got drunk .

0

vl~t~I.~11̀ it

Vtq

I dg

~il

* le

~sl

So I said to this most wretched Engineer . . . 'No Man M yBette', None My Worse, Liberty .

Banners Removed b y"Buildings and Grounds"

Building and Grounds removed all outdoor homecomin g

banners Wednesday morning but replaced them by mid-after-

noon .

Alan Cornwall, homecomin g

chairman, said that permissio n

had been granted for the banner s

and that the B & G gave them

information and

oo rvery little

poor

co-operation .

The banners were to be take ndown Wednesday night befor e

congregation and put back up o nFriday.

Haw Your Mind

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it could save you years of suf-fering, thousands of wasteddollars! Get your copy o fReader's Digest today — 3 8articles of lasting interest and along book condensation .BUY A TOTEM

FIRST UNITED NATIONS FEATURE FILM

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Vogue Theatre : 7:00 and 9:00 p .m .

Sunday, October 23r dCOLLECTION FOR WORLD REFUGEE YEA R

Photograph sfor Christmas

To the discriminating stu-dent who knows and ap-preciates

fine

p hot o -preciatesgraphy, we are pleased tooffer our personally creat -ed, expertly finished por-ed ,traits

at special

studenttraitsprices .Phone for an appointment

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3189 WEST BROADWAYVancouver 8, B.C.

WUS Candidate

Standards Rise

KINGSTON (CUP)—A more tightly defined means of se-lecting candidates for the WUSC summer seminar was approve d

here at the fifteenth National Assembly .The action followed criticisms

levelled by University of Mont-real professor Jacques - Yva nMorin and four past seminarparticipants .

A bloc resolution passed b ythe assembly was concernedmainly with the selection of can-didates on each campus .

'Part of the resolution with th eestablishment and organizationof the selection board ; the otherhalf stipulates the requirement :of the applicants . The assembl ywas told the definition of tinboard was made because this ha tbeen a weak point on som rcampuses . It was learned tha .one university sent a candidat ewithout even bothering to appoint a board or even to advetize the seminar to the studen tbody .

National Chairman Dea n`ames Gibson of Carleton le ihe chair to tell the assembl yhat "the whole good faith o fVUSC is pledged to the semina r. . and scrupulous care must b e

used in selecting candidates .WUSC should not be exposed to-ielfish self - seeking individual s. . . that have no part in it.

The resolution also declaresthat a certificate, indicating tha tthe proper requirements hav ebeen fulfilled in selecting a can-didate, must be forwarded tothe National Office with the ap-plication form .

No site has been chosen fo rthe 1961 seminar but Sweden ha sfirst choice with Tunisa . Otherseminars considered : Poland ,1962 ; and Malaya or China, 1963 .

9lte Su4&L well. equipped

for ARCHITECTURE . . .

'MY BANS.

102 WV/OH GMO ^li f

BANK OF MONTREAL

6a4Ca i4,d '7&40 Vaacle ~ac Se dewed

Your campus branch in the Administration BuildingMERLE C. KERIBY, MANAGER

MSI Services

Will Continue

More than 2700 students hav esigned up for the UBC-Medica lServices Incorporated plan .

UBC Health Service directorDr. A.K. Young, said MSI wil lprobably continue to offer it sservices to students in lutureyears 'because of the num .erthat signed up .

Lost License

Now RestoredHamsoc went off the air las t

week when their license va ssuspended by the Departmen tof Transport .

The suspension occurred asa result of Hamsoc operating ona distress frequency for ships .Since Hamsoc had no phone ta eDOT could not notify them wh enthe frequency was needed .

The difficulty was technica land has been cleared up .

Hamsoc's license was restore dand they now have a phone .

TUXEDOO

RENTAL & SALES '• Full Dress• Morning Coats• White and Blue Coat s• Shirts end Accessorie s• $1 .00 discount to

UBC Students .E. A. LEE LTD .

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The student well equipped t o

span the widest horizons of

opportunity uses a B of M

Savings Account as a dependabl e

ladder and uses it rung by rung .

Page 5: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

.-Thursday, October 27, 1960

THE U B Y S S E Y

Page 5

1960Rallyon

ClassesOff

Pep Rally At Noon TodayMills Brothers Stage

Show In Memorial' Gym

THE GATEWAY SINGERS headline homecoming ball .

Four Distinguished SpeakersAddress Students Tomorro w

"Should Canadian University l

Students Prepare Themselves ;

for University Service?" wil l

be the topic of a panel discus-

sion to be held in Bu 106 at

noon tomorrow.

The four panelists are F . H. 'Soward, Dr. Albert Lepawsky ,Dean Neil Perry, and Chairman ,Warden Hugh Christie .DEAN SOWARD TO SPEA KDean F .H. Soward, F .R.S .C .

is Professor and Associate Dea nof the Faculty of Graduate Stud-ies at UBC. He received his B .A .at Toronto and his Bachelor o fLiterature at Oxford .

CHRISTIE ON PANE LWarden Hugh Christie who

will chair this discussion, re-ceived his diploma in S o c i a l1Work fro}n U .B.C., in 1942, andhis BA., with 2nd class honoursin Sociology and Economics in1945 .

DIRECTOR UN TRAININ GDr: Albert Lepawsky is direc-

tor of the United Nations Train-ing Centre at U .B .C. He receivedhis Ph. B., and Ph. D. at the Uni-versity of Chicago .

NEW COMMERCE DEA NDr. Neil Perry is Dean of

Commerce at UBC . Until he be-came Dean, he was Assistant Di- !rector of the World Bank i nWashington, D.C . He was educa- Ited in Victoria high schools, Vic-toria College and Harvard .

Hear these four men presenttheir views on this topical issue

1 — tomorrow .DR. ALBERT LEPAWSK Y

DEAN F. H. SOWARD DEAN NEIL PERRY

WARDEN HUGH CHRISTIE

to the Homecoming Pep Rally at noo n

today in the Memorial Gym .For 25c you can see and hea r

the Mills Bros ., and all proceedswill go to the Red Feather Cam-paign .

Feature Attractions are :• The Mills Brothers with

a supporting cast fromthe Cave Theatre Res-taurant .

Presentation of the Grea tTrekker Award .Introduction of theHomecoming Queen Can-didates .Mr. J. Gordon Gibson onbehalf of the Red Feathe rUnited Appeal .

U .B .C . Thunderbird Foot-ball Team introduced bycoach Frank Gnup .Pep Band with U.B.C .Majorettes a n d Cheer-leaders .

The star feature of the Pe pRally, courtesy of the Cave, i sthe appearance of the Mill sBrothers . This well-known tri ohas appeared in Europe as wellas US and Canada where theyhave gained millions of friend sand fans .

The Mills Brothers, supportedby the Dave Robbins Orchestra,have agreed to appear gratis atthis Pep Rally as it is in aid ofthe Red Feather United Appeal .

Don't miss this opportunity —attend the Homecoming Pe pRally!!!!!

°

This year therefor everyone .

Come one, come all,

Greetings Fro mOur Chairma nTo come here is always a

time for though, a time for nos-talgia, sentiment, and a littl esorrow. When a graduate re-turns to his alma mater, itshould be a time of joy .

Think of the changes durin gfour short years at university ,the new buildings, the popula-tion increase, and even thechanged parking system.

Try to envision a grad -of fortyyears ago returning to such anenvironment . Impressive? Yes .Confusing? Perhaps. Beneficial?One sometimes 'wonders . .

Homecoming is not named forthe students, but for the grads.This is the student's chance t oshow their hospitality, to b efriendly, helpful, and to showthe grads that in spite of the en-rollment increase, the congenia latmosphere of the universit ystill exists . This must be don ewith dignity for people often re-member bad impressions longerthan good ones.

The Alumni

Homecoming Activities plan-ned for graduates returning tothe hallowed halls of t h e i rhigher learning, this year com-bine new highlights in stimulat-ing discussion, with ever-populartraditional social and athleticevents .

The official "kick-off" of th eAlumni portion of the Home-coming Programme is the Key-note Address Friday night, b ySir Frank C. Francis, Directo rand Principal Librarian of theBritish Museum in London, Eng-land .

During Homecoming registra-tion a coffee hour will be heldin Brock Lounge at 9 a .m . High-lighting the event will be a widevariety of faculty displays, ar-ranged by undergraduate facul-ties and alumni .

At 10:00 Saturday mornin gthree panel discussions will getunderway simultaneously in th eLaw Building .

THE FUTURE OF OUR UNI-VERSITIES is the topic to bediscussed by a panel chaired byDr. J . L. Keays, BA. Sc. '41, ofthe research division of Macmil-lan, Bloedel and Powell River

Ltd. Opening the discussion willbe Eric Nicol .

Among the questions underdiscussion will be these : Are we

trying to educate an elite group ?as important as quality in our

do we believe that quantity i suniversities ; have our universi-ties a role to play h. research ,both in humanities and th esciences? and have junior col-leges role in British Colmbia ?

The third panel topic is ATH-L E T I C S A .S EDUCATIO NChairman is Charles MI. Camp -bell, Jr ., former chairman of th'eACA .

Opening discussion will b epresented by Dean A . W. Mat-thews (UBC Faculty of Phar-macy) . Panelists will be FrankRead, Dr . Max Howell, and HerbCapozzi .

To be discussed: Is the ama-teur ' spirit dead? Is it true thatCanadians are better at spectatorsport than participant sport ?not be given as freely as academ-ic scholarships? Do w i n n i-n gWhy should athletic scholarshipsgames promote better public re+lations?

HomecomingCommittee has provided a pro-gram,, for the grads. The Stu-dent Committee has attempte dto provide a schedule that wil lplease the varied tastes of thestudents .

Happy Homecoming 1960 !—Alan Cornwall

will be seat s

Alumni Return To.Active Schedule

Page 6: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 27, 1960Thi

1960 HOMECOMING

MISS ACADIA CAMP . . . JOAN HUDSON AtiRICULTURE . . . MARGARET LEROUX MISS ARTS . . . P

MISS ENGINEERING . . . JANE SPRATT MISS FORESTRY & HOME ECONOMICS . . . BONNIE WAUGH MISS FORT CAMP . . . I R

MISS PHARMACY . . .MISS MEDICINE . . . ELAINE JEFFERY MISS MEN'S RESIDENCES . . . SANDRA LEE HYMAS

Page 7: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

October 27, 1960

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

QUEEN CANDIDATES

,NGLIN MISS COMMERCE . . . CHRIS LESLIE MISS EDUCATION . . . GLENNIS McLEO D

4{NACCHIOTTI MISS FROSH . . . DIANE COOPERBAND MISS LAW . . . KAREN YOUEL L

MISS SOCIAL WORK . . . MARY BROWNPhotos by—Lloyd Spence (Totem)

CAMPBELL

MISS PHYSICAL EDUCATION . . . JOANNE JACKSON

Page 8: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Page 8 .

THE. U8Y5_SEY

Thursday,-October 27, 1960

DR. HUGH KEENLEYSIDE

DR. K-EENLEYSID ECHAIRS DISCUSSIO N

Dr. Hugh L . Keenleyside wil l

chair an alumni discussion, "AreCanadian Standards in Educa-

tion and Scholarship Too Low?"

Opening speaker will be Dr .Wilder Penfield, UBC 1946, aresearcher with the MontrealNeurological Institute .

He will be followed by Prof .G. O. B . Davies, Dr . George Vol-ko:z, and Dr . Nell Perry .

The chairman, Dr. Keenley-side, graduated in 1920 .I n 192 8h began a distingu'she i careerin government service and re -tired in 1959 as chief of the Uni-ted Nations Technical Assistanc eAdministration . He is now chair-man of the B.C . Power Com-mission .

StudentsTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 27

12:30 P .M.—PEP RALLY — MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM

Featuring the Mills Brothers and a support-

ing cast from the Cave .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28

12:30 P .M.—PANEL DISCUSSION — BUCHANAN 10 6

Panelists : Chairman . Dean F. H. Soward, Dr.

Albert Lepawsky, Dr. Neil Perry and Warden

'Hugh Christie.

7 :30 P.M.—BASKETBALL GAME — MEMORIAL

GYMNASIUM

Grads- vs. `Birds.

Presentation of Homecoming Queen candi-

dates and the Great Trekker. .

9:00 P .M.--HOMECOMING DANCE — ARMOURIES

Crowning of Homecoming Queen .

Gateway Singer s

Music by the Orchestra of Brick Henderson .

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 9

2:00 P.M -HOMECOMING FOOTBALL GAME—

STADIUM

Thunderbirds vs: University of Saskatchewan

Appearance of the Homecoming Queen candi -

dates and the Great Trekker . •

9 .00 P.M:HOMECOMING DANCE — ARMOURIES

Gateway "Singers and Orchestra of BrickHenderson.Appearance of the Homecoming Queen and

her court.

Alumn iFRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 8

8:30 p.m.-KEYNOTE ADDRESS : Sir Frank C . Francis . ,

Director and Principal Librarian, British Mu-

seum, London. Subject : "Libraries—The Great

International Network ."

A coffee hour to follow.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 9

9:00 a .m.—COFFEE HOUR & REGISTRATION — Brock

Lounge .

10 .00 a .m.—PANEL DISCUSSIONS (held simultaneously )

1. Are Canadian standards in Education and

Scholarship too low?

2. The future of our Universities .

3. Athletics as Education .

Law Building. Cost: no charge .

12:00 p.m.—BARBECUE LUNCHEON—The Field House .

2:15 p .m.—GUIDED CAMPUS TOUR, by bus, departing

from the Field House .

6:30 p.m.—CLASS REUNIONS—1920—Faculty Club.

1930—Buchanan Bolding .

1935—Mildred Brock Room, Brock Hall .

1940—Cafeteria, Auditorium building .

1945 International House .

1950—Brock Lounge .

9:00 p .m.—ALUMNI HOMECOMING BALL—B roc k

Hall . Dress semi-formal . Music by George Cal-

angis Orch.

GATEWAY SINGER S

FridayOctober 28

SaturdayOctober 29

$3 .50 pa :couple3 :00 p~vr r_o.

II

hizadlinipqihR

Homecoming Bal lWith Brick Henderson and His Orchestr a

TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT A .M.S. OFFICE, BROCK HALL

HOMECOMING QUEEN WILL BE CROWNED FRIDAY NIGHT

n{'

Page 9: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Thursday, October 27, 1960

TiH>E' .,UJKB Y'S SEY

',Tap . . 9

corn -

FRATERNITY AND SORORITY pledges of 1960 conducted tour sof the campus for members of the Indoor Sports Club, agroup of physically handicapped people, last Saturday .

Photo by Atlas Studios

Entertainment at Homecoming dances both Friday andSaturday evening will feature the guest appearance of theGateway Singers .

Homecomin gQueen pickedThis Friday

A busy week ends Friday ,night when one of fifteenQueen andidates will be chosento reign over Homecoming .

They who have been selecte dby their respective faculties asHomecoming Queen candidateshave had a busy round of offic-ial duties leading up to thei rfirst public appearance today a tnoon in the Memorial Gym .

Voting for the Homecomin gQueen will continue today unti l5 p.m. at the South Brock andalso at the Pep Meet from 12 :3 0to 2 :30 p .m. in the. War Memori-al- Gym, where the candidate swill be escorted down the aisl eby Student Councillors .

Student votes will account for40% of the total points awarded .Balloting will be in the form ofa preferential 'ballot, 1st, 2ndand 3rd choice only.

Yesterday, the Queen's Te awas held in the Mildred Broc kRoom from 3 :30 to 5 :30 p .m .

Nine judges scored the candi-dates on the basis of poise an dgeneral presentation, beauty o fface and figure, and personality.This accounted for 60% of th epoints awarded .

Judges for this event were :Mrs . Kathy Hassard, VancouverSun; Mrs. Betty Runcie, TheProvince; Mrs. Ethel Rose ,James Lovick and Co . ; Mr .W.E. Ellis, Goodwin and Ellis iAdvertising ; Mr. Barry Baldwin,Alumni H.C. Chairman; Peter. FOLKSY M US I (mss

/'~

C.W.J. Eliot, Classic Dept . ; Prof .

DeptJohn. ; K

.Prof . W.

Stager ,Read, Psycholo

- Geography F R H 0 ME COMINGgy Dept .

The Queen candidates will re-ceive corsages ,at the receptionin the Mildred Brock Room onFriday, at 8:00 p .m. The recep-tion is for all candidates, pat-rons, special guests, council, andcommittees .

At 9 .00 p.m. on ' Friday-, th ecandidates will be introducedduring half time at the 'basket -ball game in the Memorial Gym .

The Homecoming ; Ball willfollow on Friday and at 10 :4 5p .m. the candidates will be intro -duced on stage. The crowningceremony will follow .

On Saturday at 9:00 a.m . ,there will be an Alum CoffeeParty in the Brock Lounge ,where. all faculty Queens wil lserve .

-The faculty Queens, the

Homecoming Queen and the tw oPrincesses will ride around th etrack at half time during thefootball gam,e .

At 10:25 p .m ., there will be apresentation of the facultyQueens, the Homecoming Quee nand the two Princesses at th eAlumni Dance. Later at 10 :45p.m., they will be introduce dof - the Student HomecomingBall .

THE ANSWE R

TO BALDNESS

Sad but true, baldness hasbe-come more prevalent . Thereis a reason for this but -theimportant thing is that w ehave the answer! The NuviaProcess guarantees newgrowth from the very firs ttreatment. This new hair i svisible in exactly two weeks ,being 1/16" long at that tim eand bristly. As it continuesto grow, it retains its strongtexture . Your satisfaction an dconfidence will increase aseach treatment produces anew crop .

NUVIA CLINI C

618 Davie St.

MU 1-5650

Last Minute ClubOffers Top Bargains

One dollar, your name on a priority list and you might

;et to see such . talent as Harry Belafonte Singers, Mort Sahl

,nd Van Cliburn through the efforts of the . Last Minute

Club.

Persons with their names on ariority list will have a chanc e

pick up 'cancelled seats oneill hour before curtain time a tie Queen Elizabeth Theatre .

To get your name on the lis tall you have to do is get therefirst and, pay one dollar . Thecashier in the AMTS office wil lgive you a voucher which en-titles you to one seat .

With this voucher you ca rair entrance for only 75c fo rdiets which would normall yan from $2.50-$10.Some of the c. ;ming attraction '

aclude: Mort Sahl ; "The Plea -are of his Company" with Jeer.

U .B .C. Aggie

Elected asN.W. Chairma n

A University of B .C. Agricul-ture students has been electedchairman of the Pacific North -west ,branch of the AmericanSociety of Agricultural Engin-eers .

Gordon Timbers, Agriculturewas elected at the ASAE stu-

lent branch convention in Vic --oria last week .

Delegates from B .C ., Washing-ton, Oregon, and Idaho were )_resent at the convention .

Choosing interesting shirts and lively ties isn't dig:cult when you've only excellent ones to choose from .Those being the only kind we admit to our selections ,they are bound to delight you, every one. Highlightsare herewith presented.

the shirt 'n tie bar658 SEYMOUR STREE T

(In Bay Parkade)

"come in and tie one on"

Tab Collar Shirts from $5 .95Ivy Button Down from $6.95Foullard and Rep p

Stripe Ties $2 .50

only woman in theThis mixed foursome will en- i plete the quartet .

tertsin with "folk songs for I —moderns" gleaned from aroundthe world. Africa, Israel, Korea ,the Bahamas, Latin America an dNorth America are represente din their repertoire .

Their informal between-numbers banter amusing heckl-ing ,aimed mainly at themselves ,and centered around banjo-strumming Jerry Walters, pro-vides refreshing wit and sparkl eto their performance .

Singer-guitarists Marc Rich-ards and Adam Fredericks, an dcontralto Elmerlee Thomas, the

PERFECT MILDNESS

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Essay Typing

Reasonable Rates—Accurat e

Work — RE 3-3780 (evgs . )

Furnished H.K.R. close t oeverything. Private bath-room. Suit one or twomale students . CA 4-7224 .

ELVIRA' SPalma de Mallorca

Special selection inIMPORTED GIFTS

from Spain, French Morroco ,Italy, etc .

ful"And for the man who haseverything " there are color-ful leather wine bags wit hreal bull-horn stoppers

.guaranteed to keep the wineat its fragrant best for 50 yrs .

4479 W. 10th Ave.CA 4-0848

531 for 2 ounces ,Suggested price, all taxes Include d

. . .Brahadi's smoking'tobacco is a specia l"Cavendish" blend ofMild tobaccos. Comfort -ably. satisfying . . . a mildsmoking tobacco with adelightful aroma .Brahadi's is availabl eat select tobacco stores .

Bennett and Donald Cook; VanCliburn; Caledonia; BelafonteFolk 'Singers and. Mischa Elman .

Poster for these events will beposted about the campus thre edays prior to each event .

RIDG ETHEATR E

16th and Arbutus

FREE PARKING LOT

OCTOBER 25th to 29thTuesday to Saturday

An Outstanding Progra m

Paul Muni — David Wayne"THE LAST ANGRY MAN"

Betsy Palmer -

"ONCE MORE WITHFEELING"

ColorKay Kendall — Yul Brenner

News

DOORS 6:4 5

STARTS MONDAY OCT 31

Peter Sellers i n"BATTLE OF THE SEXES "

Laurence Harvey in"THE TRUTH ABOUT

WOMEN"

Page 10: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Page 10

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 27, 196 0

DR. WILDER PENFIELD, forme rhead of Montreal Neurologi-cal Institute, will take part i nhomecoming panel discussion sin UBC 's Law Building Satur-day at 10 a .m .

Two AwardsAvailable

Ceylon is offering an unspeci-fied number of Commonwealt hScholarships to Canadian stu-dents .

ALUMNI TO HOL DREUNION DINNERS

By ANN HOWARTH

Six classes ranging from 1950-1925 will hold reunions thi s

weekend, during the homecoming .

Reunion dinners have becom e

an integral part of the Home -

coming activities . Each year ,classes return to the campus fo r

a special get-together with the

old class-mates and professors .

tervals the most recent havin by each class, even with foot-

g ball offering strong competitiongraduated 10 years prior to the for attention . ,present . date. This year the And when 700 or 800 gradu-

classes are from the years '50,1 ates return to the campus fo rthe parties, some to he held inold fcmilar buildings, others wil lbe held in the new, they will no tbe disappointed .

Cocktails before dinner, an dentertainment . to follow, plus thefellowship of by-gone days, wil lmake October 29 a memorabl eevening . (Oct. 28 in the case ofClass 'of '25 . )

This year the Cl ss of '20 wil lbe holding a reunion at the time .Usually these "older" graduateswill have convened at the theseof spring congregation .

This year however, with con-gregation falling at the sam etime as Homecoming ,they ar ejoining the other reunion years ,and reuniting at the same time .

A very able committee, chair-ed by Judge Swencisky, ha sbeen planning their 40the re -union for the past year and ahalf . The yhope to see many o fof their class-mates at th eFaculty Club, starting with cock-tails, dinner ,and some reminisc-ing, to round out the celebra-tions .

Socred WillistonTo Open New Win g

'Hon . Ray Williston, Ministe rof Lands and Forests, will of- 1ficially open the MacLean Fras-er Wing of the Biological Sci-ences Building on Friday .

The opening, in conjunctionwith other Homecoming activi-ties, will take place at 4 :00 p .m .

Following immediately, Dr .T.W.M. Cameron, head of th eInstitute of Parasitology at Mac -Donald College, McGill, wil lspeak to the gathering .

din Engineot Defined=An Engineer is a person who

passes as an .exacting expert onthe , basis of being able to turnout with prolific fortitude in-

-finite strings of incomprehen-sible formulae calculated withmicro metric precision from thevague assumptions which ar ebased on debatable figurestaken from inconclusive experi-ments carried out with instru-ments of problematical accur-acy by persons of doubltfulreliability and questionablementality for the avowed pur-pose of annoying and confound-ing a hopeless chimerica lgroup of fanatics referred to ,all too frequently, as Engin-

( eers.

Japanese Fil m

Showing Today

Cinema 16 presents the dap-The largest increase was in anese film "Seven Sammie' to -

the faculty of arts and science day, 12 :30, in Bu . 106 .with a total of 5,837 students—

No one who has seen Rosho -665 over last year .

man or Gate of Hell will nee dFaculty of education show- ,

ed an increase c 371 students an introduction to the imagine -

with a total of 2,190 . The only Live work of the Japanese thee -other faculty which grew sub-1 tre, or the force and effect ofstantially was graduate studies the direction of Akira Kure- -which has 707 as compared to r sawa .

-616 .

Seven Sumurai is an excellen tRegistration in other faculties example of the suspense, excite -

is as follows with 1959-60 figures , ment and humour with whic hin brackets: agriculture 179(171) ; applied science, 1,33 9(1,351) ; forestry, 183 (188) ; law ,e35 (245) ; pharmacy, 153 (142) ;medicine, 203 (212); commercealmost exactly three to one .631 (654) .

very warmly received . It hasA total of 8,253 men and 3,404 received international acclaim ,

women are registered making winning the Silver Medal atthe ratio between the two groups 1 'Venice in 1955 .

a committee, which arranges thedetails for ecah function. TheAlumni Office on campus, to-gether with one of the member sof the Board of Management ,help to co-ordinate -plans:

These six follow at 5 year in-

A good tunrout is anticipate d

'45, '40, '35, '30, and '25 .

The arrangements for eachclass are looked after by theclass executive, elected eachyear at graduation time .

This year the plans for dinnersare chaired by , Class of '50 Mr .Don Lanskail, Class of '45 co-chaired by Mr. Jack Heathering-ton and Mr . Bob Binnie, Class of'40 Mrs. Helen Belkin, Class of'35 Mrs. Marnie Steward, Classof '30 Dr. Malcolm McGregor ,Class of '25 Mr . Bert Smith .

Each chairman is assisted b y

Delta Sigma P iMember s

UBC's honorary sorority wil l

through sdhalarsihip, leadershipand service .

The initiates are :Ruth Kidd, WUSC chair-man; Sidney Shakespeare ,WAA, president; MarilynPeterson, WAA ra n d B i gBlock; Inge Andreen, BigBlock president ; PatienceRyan, UCC chairman ; Mar-nie Rogers, Academic Sym-posium chairman .

Patient Loading Zon eFor UBC Hospita l

A new parking area has been

assigned behind the hospital forcars transporting patients .

The new lot is a 30-minut eparking area and has room forfour cars .

This action was prompted byincidents where Buster's towe daway cars transporting patient s

One of the cars was impound-ed by Band G and another wa srescued by the owner just as i twas being prepared for the tripto the nepound .

initiate six

tober 30 .Members of Delta Sigma Pi

are selected on the;basis of thei rcontributions to the c a m p u s

new members,, Oc -

JACK POMFRE Tcoaches Bird s

New Halftime ShowUBC'S annual Homecoming

basketball game is traditionallyfeatured by wild entertainment .

In past years, faculty and stu-dent council have performedamazing feats of skill and daringin trying to outdo each other .

This year, the entertainmentwill be less hairy, and nicer tolook at . The Homecoming Queencandidates will be presented .

ENROLMENT JUMPSAS USUAL AT U.B.C.

Enrolment has increased more than 11 per cent to a recordtotal of 111,657 students, registrar J . E. A. Parnall announcedtoday.

Officials had predicted an in-crease of six or seven per cen twhich would have meant an en-rolment of 11,300 for the 1960 -61 session

Kurosawa embellishes the ,es-sentially simple folk stories o fJapan .

The film has been shown pre-viously in Vancouver, at th eSummer Festival, where it wa s

Application forms are avail-able at Dean Gage's office . Clos-ing date is November 30, 1960 .

The Japanese government i soffering a 20,000 yen ($60 )scholarship tenable in the Orientfor two years beginning April ,1961 .

Winner of the award will beexempted of tuition, matricula-tion, and examination fees butmust pay his own travelling ex-penses .

Preference will be given stu-dents doing research in Japaneseculture or science .

Application forms may be ob-tained from the Consulate ofJapan, Rm. 1401 'Standard Build-ing, 510 West Hastings .

Deadline is Nov . 1 .

UNIVERSITY JAll SOCIETYpresents

Contemporary Jazzby way of

THE TONY CUTHERO EQUARTET

FRIDAY, OCT 28, 12 :30 p .m., 'Bu. 104

Members Free . . . Others 25 centsMemberships Available at the Door

8'FENSIONET'TE•Black, Town Brown, Green ,

Red Maracain ki dand Black sued e

'AVAILABLE IN AA & B WIDTHS ,

SIZES 4 TO 10, ONLY 9 .95

`0101 "Slack sued e

Maverick Brown plus hBlack Maracain kid

Page 11: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Thursday, October 27, 1960

THE UBYSSE,Y

Page 1 1

The UBC Thunderbirds basketball squad officially opens

the hoop season Friday night against formidable opposition sup -

6:00 will precede the game ,which begins at 8 :15. At haptime the Gymnastics team wil lput on a display and the Hom ecoming Queen candidates will b edisplayed .

Last year, the Grads sur-prised the Birds 62-58 in theHomecoming game. The Grad swere led by John Forsythe andMike Fraser, Forsythe gettingthe winning basket with a min .ute left .

In a hilarious preliminarygame last year, a group of old -.old, timers whipped a group o fnew-new Birds . The oldsterswon 6-4 in the abbreviated gam emainly because of a sudde nmeeting of the Basketball Com-mission which decided to allowthe bad guys three points perbasket .

Officials will not say whethe rthe spectacle will be repeated .

The Homecoming game, al -though more in the class of apractise, will be one .of onlythree games before Christmasfor the Birds .TOTEM FOR TWO

Besides this and two TotemTournament contests in earlyDecember, all UBC's games arein the second term.

The Birds will play only inthe WCIAU this year, and notin the Senior A league as theydid in 1959 .

Rowing Offers PlentyFor Ambitious Men

By DAV"F' AN.DERSO.N

and the sleeping city, are re-membered for being beautifulbeyond belief .

Rowing includes day afterday of frustration, when theshells just won't move .

Day after day the oarsmanwonders why he voluntarilysubjects himself to such pres-sure, fatigue and abuse. Andyet more than compensating forthe .bad times it also includesclays when the bladework iscrisp, clean and powerful ,whe nthe shell seems to leap forwardon its own account ; when theoarsman delights in the control -Ted explosion of his perfectlyconditioned body ; when it is, infact, sheer joy to sit . in a boat .GLOBETROTTER S

The sport holds rewards oftravel—the next four years willsee UBC boys in Brazil, Aus-tralia, Japan and quite possibl yEngland and Europe . It alsoholds the less certain advantageof prestige and recognition .

But travel and prestige arefar from being the importantparts of the sport . They are onl y.ncidental to the satisfaction ofbeing part of the crew.

What is important ,and this i -;he s ;me whether one sits inthe Varsity boat or not, is th esatisfaction of being part o fCanada's most dedicated andsuccessful amateur athleticorganization .

What is important is to hav etried the university's most men-tally demanding and physicallyexhausting sport, a sport whichtakes more in the way of selfdiscipline and desire than anyother, and to have the satisfac-tion. of knowing that you wer e_tot found wanting .

plied by the Grads.The galloping Grads will be

ably coached and otherwise di-rected by internationally-famou sbasketball star Big Jim "Pinky"Carter .

The awesome lineup facin gthe Birds will include such form-er UBC greats as Nev Munro ,Reid Mitchell, Harry "TheHorse" Franklin, "Long John'Forsythe and "Silver Fox" Os -borne .NEW OLD TIMERS

The first string will be backedup by old -old timers like EdWild, Barry Drummond, GordieG.imple, and Brian Upson . Al lfour played last year in th eInter-city league, Upson andWild with Dietrich-Collins, Gim-ple with Cloverleafs and Drum-mond with the Birds .

The UBC side will .be formedby the nucleus of last year' sWCIAU champions, and byseven high school scholarshipplayers.

Foremost for the Birds willbe All-stars Ken Winslade, EdPederson, and standouts DaveWay, Kieth Hartley, Ed-Gushue ,and company .SEVEN STARS

The seven newcomers ar efreshmen John Cook, Ron Park-er, Mike Harcourt, Eckhard tFerdinandi, Brian Adams, Jo nHenderson, and Jim Jamieson .

A banquet for the _grads a t

It is difficult to sit down andwrite an article on rowing be -cause rowing is something . aperson can only experience, no ta person can describe .

The simplest description ofrowing at UBC would be to sa yit is long hours of preparatio nterminating in six minutes of in -tense competition . But rowing i sfar more than that .

It includes months of arduou scalisthenics designed as much t otest the perserverence, the men-tal staying power, as it is de-signed to condition the body .

EARLY TO RIS E

It includes morning afte rmorning of pre-dawn rows ,some remembered for being wet ,choppy, . freezing and unpleas-ant; while others, with a glasssmooth harbour :to row on, andwith the sun spilling goldenlight over the mountains, water,

DAVE ANDERSON. . . crew captain

STAN KNIGHT. . , fights for QB slo t

GRAD GIMPLEOut to whip . . .

VHYtit.tuulfo Jdr. hUe cANa), here displaying a pattern honouring the UbC rowers at a ts .e . .Lions game will provide half-time enertainment at Saturday's UBC-Saskatchewan footbal lgame.

Noted Vancouver Junior BandTo Entertain Football fans

'BIRD WINSLAD E. . 1960 Thunderbirds

The Huskies also lost thei rlast game, to the WCIAU champ -ions, the Alberta Golden Bears .

Both teams will be battlingto stay out of the cellar .

True to the Homecoming tra-dition, Saturday's a . c ti v it i e spromise to be an extravaganza .Half-time entertainment will beprovided by the VancouverJunior Band; an internationallyfamous band that has won 1 9championships in the last 1 0years .

The contestants for the Home -coming queen honors will alsobe in attendance and this aloneshould be enought to file fleestadium ,

BIRDS ARE U PFor the fans who go to see

the footbal game, the Birds planto put up a real fight and-thiscould prove to be the game ofthe year . The team is in goodcondition, both mentally andphysically, and the only regula rwho may not start is Tonis Tut-ti who suffered a concussion inthe Birds' last outing .

UBC is also looking forwar dto the services of Jim Olafsonand Jack Schriber who werestandouts in the game agains tSeattle . Olafson scdred the onlyBird touchdown and was lead-ing ground gainer, while Schri-ber was a continual thorn i nthe Ramblers' side as he playe da brilliant defensive ganie .

Game time is 2:00 p .m. Satur-day and the early birds get th eseats.

When UBC Thunderbirds meet the Saskatchewan Huskiesin the annual Homecoming football game, they will have ,towork hard to win.

Bird coach Frank Gnup said'. they will work and they willwin .

Last week the Birds came upwith their best display of foot-ball this season, against th eSeattle Ramblers, but came outon the short end of a 19-7 score . SPORI-

Editor: Mike Hunter

Frosh VolleyballTeam to be Tarim

A Frosh volleyball team wil lbe formed for the B .C. SeniorBoys' championships November25 and 2.6 .

Prospective players must havebeen under 19 on September 1 .Practices will be held Wednes-days in the Memorial Gym from6 to 8 p .m .

The traditional matches withthe University of Washingtonwill be played in addition to theVancouver City and B.C. Openchampionships . UBC will alsosend a team to Saskatoon for th eIntercollegiate tournament . -

'Practices for all teams are hel dWednesdays from 6-8 p .m. in theMemorial Gym .

-More players are needed, and

are welcome to come to thepractices .

Students!For a new dining pleasuretry our daily special .

D''EANI4544 W. 10th

Open 'till 11:3 0

NOW :PLAY ;1 N .GKirk Douglas — Tony Curtis

Janet Leigh — Ernest Borgnine

"THE VIKINGS"The Greatest Adventure Picture Ever Made !

Color — One Showing at 9 :1 5

PLUSMontgomery Clift — Myrna Loy — Robert Ryan in

"THE LONELY HEARTS"7 :30

Doors at 7

Hollywood Theatr e3123 WEST BROADWAY

Page 12: Homecoming Edition .- YSSE · YSSE _he. ' VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1960 he_ Honours Col. Logan ormer Classics Head 1960' Great Trekker By SUSANNE CLARKE Colonel Harry

Page 12

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 27, 196 0

Applications Due For Frosh Council _Applications are now being i All qualifications for the po -

'TWEEN CLASSE S

Cancel all for HomecomingMeeting to-day cancelled . Poo l

training (meet on pool deck) :6 :00. Skindiver class pool examscuba, 4 :00-5 :00; skindiving, 5 :00 -to be field to-day and next Thurs.-

Slay .s s s

CINEMA 16-Presents Japanese classic

"Seven Samurai", directed b yAkira Kurosawa .

m

:z

CCF CLU BAll club members interested

in debating asked to attendmeeting, Bu. 225, noon Friday .

NISEI VARSITY CLU BGeneral meeting today, Bu .

205 ..s

s

s

BAPTIST STUDENT UNIO NBible study today in Bu . 2202

(new wing) .s

s_ s

EAST ASIAN SOCIETYToday at 12 :30 Dr . Ping-to H o

will deliver a lecture on Chinese

CLASSIFIE DWOULD the person who too k

the wrong raincoat from out -side Chem. 250, Tuesday, 9 :30call Joel, AM 1-0933 .

FOUND—Man's wrist watch .Gold band. Call CA 4.6786 .

FOR SALE—Royal, silent-writerportable typewriter, recentmodel, excellent condition ,reasonable price. Phone AM1-8419 after 6 P.m. cliff Ains-worth .

MUST sacrifice 24 watt Bogenstereophonic amplifier , onlyused 3 mos . Phone Kerry atCA 8-8032 after 6 .

LOST—Black leather walletcontaining important - papersand queen's picture. Pleasephone Connie after 6 :30 p .m . ,BR 7-7963 .

WHOEVER lifted black umbrel-la from miens' room Caf shouldknow it is radioactive. Saveyourself and return to office154 Buchanan .

WANTED—A ride to 8 :30' sMon. to Sat. from 41st aveand Rupert St. Phone HE4-7778.

WANTED— Ride to leave UDCat 3:30, vicinity of 41st and Ar-

butus . Phone AaVI 6-0617 .

WANTED-2 students, roomand board, $65 mo . Car pool$1 .50 wk. Phone MU 1-407 6after 5 :40 p.m .

LOIST—Pet squirrel, of senti-mental value. Finder pleas econtact Neil iWoolliams, CA4-9962 or Bob Cannon, CA4-9949, Okanagan House . Re -

' ward .

CONSUL for sale,exceptionallygood condition, engine an dtransmission recently osier-hauled, new tires . Call RE1-8003 .or RE 3-0809, eves .

LOST—Would the person wh otook my dark reversible rain -coat out of Physics 200 lastSat . please return it to Brian ,TR 6-0892 .

LOSTSilver and blue SchafferSnorkel pet between Educa-tion Bldg. and BuchananPldg. Return- to lost andround. Reward .

painting in AnthropologicalMuseum ,(in Library) .

* * s

'SOCIETY OF BACTERIOLOG YMeeting Wes. 100, .. Friday ;

October 28, 12 :30 . Film : "HumanDiseases and Immunity". Every-one welcome .

C.I.C .Mr. Howard Edwards of Van-

couver Food and Drug Labs willgive lecture and film, Fridaynoon, Ch. 250 .

* * *

FRIENDS OF CHAMBE RMUSIC

Tickets for 13th Season ofConcerto by famous chambermusic groups are on site inA.M.S office. Students' seaso ntickets $1 .00 .

s s sSTUDENT CHRISTIAN

MOVEMENT

_ _"The Impact of Western Civil-

ization on Africa ." First studygroup on Africa Friday, 12 :30 ,Hut 1-6, East Mall . All welcome .

* * -VARSITY CHRISTIA N

FELLOWSHIP

_ _Dr. Roy Seibel will speak Fri-

day in Arts 100 .

After surrounding the build-ing, police raided a skiers' "stagparty" in the Moose Hall onHowe St ., and arrested 130 men ,charged with being inmates o fa gambling house .

Many of those arrested listedthemselves as university stu-dents. Only three of the -mencharged appeared in police

Liquor Saleson Campus ?

Do you think liquor salesshould be allowed on campus ?

Your opinion can be heardduring Student Forum debate"Resolved: That the cafeteriashould be licensed to serve wineand beer ." noon Thursday inBu. 104 .

The audience will then beasked to question the speakersand to give their own opinions .

EUROPEAN TRAINEDBARBERS

Individually Styled Haircut sUPPER TENTH

BARBER & TOILETTRIES4574 W. 10th

PHILOSOPHY CLU B

The paper to be given Mondaynoon in Bu . 225 is "Dialogue Be- 'tween Wittgenstein and Soc- 'rates" by Jack Ornstien . -

a

JUNIOR CHEM CLU BFilm, Friday noon in Ch . 150 .

Last day for new members t oregister .

BIOLOGY CLU B

Films "Between the Tides" !and "The Electric Eel" will b eshown Friday noon in Biologica lSciences 2000 .

GERMAN CLUBHear about Germany from !

panel, including exchange stu-dents . Bu. 204, Friday noon .

A discussion group on "Social-ist Philosophy of the CCF" inBu. 2208, Thursday evening, 7

• p .m. to 9:30 p .m .

Court, the rest forfeited theirbail .

The party was to support Jun-ior Skiing .

received for the positions of Pub-lic Relations Officer and Editorof the News-letter for FroshCouncil .

sition should ibe included in theapplication . They must oe placedin Box 140, AMS office by Fri-day afternoon .

TAKE IT T O

SPOTLES SMore SHIRTS 19ea.

VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS !We have over 250 satisfied V-W owners patronizing our

station. Qualified V-W mechanics make expert repairs and

service a specialty .

Why not give us a try !

UNIVERSITY SHELL SERVIC E10th Ave & Discovery

CA 4-0828

FRE!F,' PICK UP AND DELIVERY

IMMUNIZATION CLINI C

Regular immunization Clini cnormally Thursday 2:00-4:00 can-celled today because of con !vocation .

I

s

. s

s *

CCF CLU B

Students InvolvedIn Gambling Raid -

Several UBC students were among those arrested at mid -

night Friday in Vancouver's largest recent gambling raid .

• You will receive allowancesfor board and roo m

• You will receive freemedical and dental car eand, best of all, you will b ebeginning an interestin gand adventurous career asan officer in Canada' smodern Army .

Call your University SupportOfficer today or write to :

Directorate of Mannino

Army Headquarter sOttawa

"It's a pleasure to do business with them.

Such a selection and pleasant service .

They always cash cheques for the stu-

dents and offer credit when required ."

RICHARDS & PARISH MENSWEA R802 Granville St.

MU 4-481 9

Vancouver, B. C .

"Complete Stock of University Clothes "

You can become an Officer in theCanadian Army, and complete you r

education with financial assistanceby enrolling in the tri-service

Regular Officer Training Plan.

• Your tuition anduniversity fees will be paid

• You will receive an annualgrant for books an dinstrument s

TRAIN FOR TOMORRO Wserve your way through university